Ebola disease: bridging scientific discoveries and clinical application
- PMID: 39675368
- DOI: 10.1016/S1473-3099(24)00673-X
Ebola disease: bridging scientific discoveries and clinical application
Abstract
The west Africa Ebola disease epidemic (2014-16) marked a historic change of course for patient care during emerging infectious disease outbreaks. The epidemic response was a failure in many ways-a slow, cumbersome, and disjointed effort by a global architecture that was not fit for purpose for a rapidly spreading outbreak. In the most affected countries, health-care workers and other responders felt helpless-dealing with an overwhelming number of patients but with few, if any, tools at their disposal to provide high-quality care. These inadequacies, however, led to attention and innovation. The decade since then has seen remarkable achievements in clinical care for Ebola disease, including the approval of the first vaccines and treatments. In this paper, the first in a two-part Series, we reflect on this progress and provide expert summary of the modern landscape of Ebola disease, highlighting the priorities and ongoing activities aimed at further improving patient survival and wellbeing in the years ahead.
Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved, including those for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of interests TL has received a grant to support the running of the UK Vaccine Taskforce from the National Institute of Health Research, was a consultant for Vaccitech on an unrelated project, and is named as an inventor on a patent application for a vaccine against SARS CoV-2. AR has received a pump-priming grant and an AfOx catalyst grant from the University of Oxford and travel support from WHO (for travel to the workshop on building research readiness for a future filovirus outbreak and the WHO R&D pathogen shortlisting meeting). PH and AR are supported by the Moh Family Foundation, which provides institutional support to the Pandemic Sciences Institute. All other authors declare no competing interests.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical